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Scavenging seaglass and remembering messages in bottles

By Melanie Floyd — March 20, 2014

After a week indoors—babysitting and feeling sick—I ventured out yesterday. I felt close to being better and it was sunny, though cool once I stepped out, and my mother wanted the dog walked anyways. The dog who, when kept inside all day, gets antsy during the night and rips apart tissue boxes or decapitates/unstuffs her

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Tales of ‘Ladies Night’ became island legend

By Barbara Fernald — March 20, 2014

What do you think of when you hear the term Ladies Night? Discounted drinks and free hors d’oeuvres at your local bar? On Little Cranberry Island the term Ladies Night specifically refers to a potluck dinner at an island home where the hostess provides a main dish and other female guests bring a variety of

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The go-to du jour: Soup’s on

By Sandy Oliver — March 20, 2014

Someone once said that if you need to make more of a dish, just add to it whatever you have most of. That would hardly ever be beef steaks or lobster. Water? No problem. To feed a crowd on a little, make soup. That’s why we have soup kitchens, but not roast chicken kitchens. Still,

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North Haven’s Casino, home to sailing programs, on firmer footings

By Courtney Naliboff — March 20, 2014

NORTH HAVEN — Each summer, the North Haven Casino is a hive of activity. Despite the name, nobody gambles or watches over-the-top performances at the Casino. Instead, it’s the hub base for small sailboats that swoop through the Thorofare, piloted by excited junior sailors and overseen by teen instructors. Experienced sailors compete against each other

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Negro League star the subject of opera

By Courtney Naliboff — March 20, 2014

PORTLAND – Composer Daniel Sonenberg and Portland Ovations are taking a leap of faith together this spring. May 8 will mark the world premiere of Sonenberg’s “The Summer King,” an opera in two acts on the life of Josh Gibson. Gibson was a catcher for baseball’s Negro Leagues in the 1930s and 1940s and is

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Island girl fulfills farm woman destiny

By Kris Osgood — March 20, 2014

NORTH HAVEN — For Libby Young, 23, life on the Turner Farm was meant to be. It’s a notion she reiterated more than once during our interview on a bitter cold January morning.   “It’s just great,” she said. “I really love it. In my high school yearbook my secret desire was to live on

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Senstive dog makes wish come true for Vinalhaven girl

By Kris Osgood — March 20, 2014

VINALHAVEN — It was a wish granted. And that doesn’t happen every day. “It’s pretty rare that what you wish for is what you get,” said Joanna Reidy, mother to 10-year-old Tess Reidy. In February, the non-profit Make-A-Wish Maine granted Tess her wish by sending Oreo, a service dog, to live with the Reidy family

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Catamaran fishing boats ready for trials

By Tom Groening — March 19, 2014

ROCKPORT — When catamaran boats first came on the scene in the early 1960s, they must have looked as strange as recumbent bicycles did a decade ago. But now, few people look twice at the vessels that have become commonly used as high-speed ferries, sailboats and even whale-watching boats. So if the design, in which

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Beach access issues remain unsettled following high court action

By Craig Idlebrook — March 19, 2014

Court watching may become a statewide pastime this spring as coastal communities await a decision from the Maine Supreme Judicial Court on beachfront access. On April 9, oral arguments are scheduled to be heard on whether the court should reconsider its recent ruling barring public access to parts of Goose Rocks Beach in Kennebunkport. In

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Uneven development: lobster landings giveth, taketh

By Rob Snyder — March 19, 2014

The annual Maine Fishermen’s Forum was packed this year. For the first time in a long time, the Samoset Resort’s 178 guest rooms were sold out. It was as if fishermen, state agency folks and non-profit staff staged a reenactment of the green crab plague facing the lobster industry. The Rockport Conference Room was similarly

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